एवमुक्त्वा मृगी राजाग्रतः प्राणैर्व्ययुज्यत । पीडिता शरघातेन पुत्रस्नेहाद्विशेषतः
evamuktvā mṛgī rājāgrataḥ prāṇairvyayujyata | pīḍitā śaraghātena putrasnehādviśeṣataḥ
Having spoken thus, the doe, before the king, gave up her life—tormented by the blow of the arrow, and even more by love for her child.
Pulastya (narrative voice continues implicitly after the quoted speech)
Scene: The doe collapses before the king, arrow-wound visible; her gaze turns toward an unseen fawn, conveying maternal attachment; the king stands stunned, remorse deepening as life departs.
Violence produces layered suffering—physical pain and the deeper wound of broken care and responsibility.
The Arbuda mountain setting is the sanctified backdrop where the moral drama culminates and karmic transformation follows.
None; this verse narrates the event that triggers the curse’s immediate effect.